
The Kids of Rutherford County - Trailer
Listen and Follow Along
Full Transcript
Hey, Serial listeners, Sarah Koenig here. We've got a new show coming out.
It's hosted by Maribah Knight, a reporter based in Nashville. A few years ago, Maribah reported on a local story about a group of 11 kids who'd been arrested, not for fighting, but for watching a fight.
Not even a fight, really. A skirmish is probably a better description.
A five- and six-year-old throwing some feeble punches at an eight-year-old. But the whole group of kids arrested.
Little elementary school-age kids. Handcuffs, police cruisers, a few of them even booked into the juvenile detention center.
It was outrageous. But also, yeah, maybe just one of those news of the weird type stories.
But Maribah started digging. And what she realized was that in the county where this took place, Rutherford County in Tennessee, in that county, arrests like this may be not so weird.
Maribah found out this had been going on for years. Kids in Rutherford County arrested and jailed at an alarming rate.
And then she asked why. The show is called The Kids of Rutherford County, and we produced it
with our partners at ProPublica and Nashville Public Radio. We've got a trailer here for you
if you want to check it out. The show is coming out on October 26th.
It's four tight episodes.
So please go follow The Kids of Rutherford County, and each episode will be delivered to you as it's
released. Here's the trailer.
Do you remember what year it was that you were you were arrested
Thank you. and each episode will be delivered to you as it's released.
Here's the trailer. Do you remember what year it was that you were arrested and jailed? I was so young that I don't even remember what was going on in that time.
Yeah, right. And so you were, how old were you? Seven.
Oh my God. When Brandon was just seven years old, police showed up at his door to arrest him.
Brandon's offense? Tagging along with his older brothers, who'd wrestled in a vacant duplex and left some holes in the drywall. Now, police were there to take Brandon and his brothers to the juvenile detention center.
Jail, basically. Brandon was held in detention overnight and then brought to the juvenile court for his hearing.
Brandon should have gone home with his mom that day, but when he went before the judge, she sent him back to jail for a week. Brandon's arrest and detention happened in Rutherford County, Tennessee, And his case wasn't unique there.
For over a decade, the county was arresting and jailing kids for even the most minor offenses.
I didn't want to go to school.
I just ran away.
I spray-painted a penis on a wall.
It happened so often to so many kids in Rutherford County
that getting sent to juvenile detention was almost a rite of passage.
In many cases, what it also was, was illegal.
This is the story of how that system came to be.
How it came to be normalized, accepted, lauded even.
It's also the story of two insiders, who actually did see the problem in Rutherford County.